A cat forum. CatBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » CatBanter forum » Cat Newsgroups » Cat health & behaviour
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

cats and crows



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old May 17th 05, 09:16 AM
Rona Y.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default cats and crows

The school at which I work has a few cats on campus--none have owners and
only one that I know of has been TNRed. The TNR cat is fed by someone on
campus (not daily, but often) but I do not know if the other cats are also
fed. Recently, a number of crows have been found dead, and people are
blaming the cats. These crows are quite large, and not eaten, just dead.
It seems to me that if hungry stray cats were able to kill these large
crows, they also would have eaten them. However, other staff members are
insisting that the cats are at fault, and that they should be trapped and
turned over to animal control (which will, without a doubt, euthanize them).

I guess what I'm hoping is to hear that it would be very difficult for a cat
to kill a crow. I need to save these cats, and passing on this kind of
information is pretty much the only way I can help these cats (I should also
mention that I'm in Japan, so no animal shelters, no humane society,
nothing--I've already investigated possible options, and there is no
organization out there who can take these cats). So, can cats kill crows
easily?

rona

--
***For e-mail, replace .com with .ca Sorry for the inconvenience!***

"[America] is filled with people who decided not to live in Europe. We had
people who really wanted to live in Europe, but didn't have the energy to go
back. We call them Canadians."
---Grover Norquist in Newsweek, November 22, 2004


  #2  
Old May 17th 05, 11:33 AM
vancats
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

The dead crows should be tested for West Nile Virus!

  #5  
Old May 17th 05, 03:23 PM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


Rona Y. wrote:
The school at which I work has a few cats on campus--none have owners

and
only one that I know of has been TNRed. The TNR cat is fed by

someone on
campus (not daily, but often) but I do not know if the other cats are

also
fed. Recently, a number of crows have been found dead, and people

are
blaming the cats. These crows are quite large, and not eaten, just

dead.
It seems to me that if hungry stray cats were able to kill these

large
crows, they also would have eaten them. However, other staff members

are
insisting that the cats are at fault, and that they should be trapped

and
turned over to animal control (which will, without a doubt, euthanize

them).

I guess what I'm hoping is to hear that it would be very difficult

for a cat
to kill a crow. I need to save these cats, and passing on this kind

of
information is pretty much the only way I can help these cats (I

should also
mention that I'm in Japan, so no animal shelters, no humane society,
nothing--I've already investigated possible options, and there is no
organization out there who can take these cats). So, can cats kill

crows
easily?

rona


I don't think the cats are killing those crows. Crows are hard to kill,
not only because of their size, but they're very smart. I also don't
think stray cats would just kill them for sport--the bodies would show
some damage, and there would be feathers all over the place. Sounds
like somebody just doesn't like the cats and they're playing the blame
game.
The real kicker is, who in the WORLD would want crows on a campus?
They're nasty and will run off the songbirds.

Sherry

  #7  
Old May 17th 05, 03:51 PM
Mary
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Rona Y." wrote in message
...
The school at which I work has a few cats on campus--none have owners and
only one that I know of has been TNRed. The TNR cat is fed by someone on
campus (not daily, but often) but I do not know if the other cats are also
fed. Recently, a number of crows have been found dead, and people are
blaming the cats. These crows are quite large, and not eaten, just dead.
It seems to me that if hungry stray cats were able to kill these large
crows, they also would have eaten them. However, other staff members are
insisting that the cats are at fault, and that they should be trapped and
turned over to animal control (which will, without a doubt, euthanize

them).

I guess what I'm hoping is to hear that it would be very difficult for a

cat
to kill a crow. I need to save these cats, and passing on this kind of
information is pretty much the only way I can help these cats (I should

also
mention that I'm in Japan, so no animal shelters, no humane society,
nothing--I've already investigated possible options, and there is no
organization out there who can take these cats). So, can cats kill crows
easily?


The crows I've seen could probably seriously injure a cat.
They are big and aggressive and loud, not the kind of bird
a cat generally picks on. And yes, of course they would
have eaten them if they had killed them and they were hungry.


  #8  
Old May 17th 05, 03:54 PM
Betsy
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

The crows are predators of cats, not vice-versa. And dead crows should be
waving a HUGE red flag in somebody's face about West Nile Virus, which is
quite serious. Here in Maryland we actually have a task force in the health
department that will come to pick up dead crows and test them.

Cats are normally the way "plagues" are held in check. There is some
serious theorizing that the reason the European plagues took off the way
they did was because people killed the cats--they were superstitious then
(gee, I think your coworkers are superstitious too!) and thought cats were
the implements of witches and the devil. Thus vermin, and the plague,
multiplied.

If it were me I'd go whole hog to educate these ignoramuses, (a SCHOOL, you
say?????) and also I'd immediately call the health department about the
crows.

"Rona Y." wrote in message
...
The school at which I work has a few cats on campus--none have owners and
only one that I know of has been TNRed. The TNR cat is fed by someone on
campus (not daily, but often) but I do not know if the other cats are also
fed. Recently, a number of crows have been found dead, and people are
blaming the cats. These crows are quite large, and not eaten, just dead.
It seems to me that if hungry stray cats were able to kill these large
crows, they also would have eaten them. However, other staff members are
insisting that the cats are at fault, and that they should be trapped and
turned over to animal control (which will, without a doubt, euthanize
them).

I guess what I'm hoping is to hear that it would be very difficult for a
cat to kill a crow. I need to save these cats, and passing on this kind
of information is pretty much the only way I can help these cats (I should
also mention that I'm in Japan, so no animal shelters, no humane society,
nothing--I've already investigated possible options, and there is no
organization out there who can take these cats). So, can cats kill crows
easily?

rona

--
***For e-mail, replace .com with .ca Sorry for the inconvenience!***

"[America] is filled with people who decided not to live in Europe. We
had people who really wanted to live in Europe, but didn't have the energy
to go back. We call them Canadians."
---Grover Norquist in Newsweek, November 22, 2004



  #9  
Old May 17th 05, 04:01 PM
Mike Romain
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

You are describing the symptoms of West Nile Virus in the crows.

Your local health department likely wants those crows for testing. Here
is a Center for Disease Control (CDC) link to find out who to call:

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/west...ity_states.htm

In a crow/cat fight, the crow will usually win by the by and if the cat
did take one down, it would eat it.

Mike


"Rona Y." wrote:

The school at which I work has a few cats on campus--none have owners and
only one that I know of has been TNRed. The TNR cat is fed by someone on
campus (not daily, but often) but I do not know if the other cats are also
fed. Recently, a number of crows have been found dead, and people are
blaming the cats. These crows are quite large, and not eaten, just dead.
It seems to me that if hungry stray cats were able to kill these large
crows, they also would have eaten them. However, other staff members are
insisting that the cats are at fault, and that they should be trapped and
turned over to animal control (which will, without a doubt, euthanize them).

I guess what I'm hoping is to hear that it would be very difficult for a cat
to kill a crow. I need to save these cats, and passing on this kind of
information is pretty much the only way I can help these cats (I should also
mention that I'm in Japan, so no animal shelters, no humane society,
nothing--I've already investigated possible options, and there is no
organization out there who can take these cats). So, can cats kill crows
easily?

rona

--
***For e-mail, replace .com with .ca Sorry for the inconvenience!***

"[America] is filled with people who decided not to live in Europe. We had
people who really wanted to live in Europe, but didn't have the energy to go
back. We call them Canadians."
---Grover Norquist in Newsweek, November 22, 2004

  #10  
Old May 17th 05, 10:39 PM
Rona Y.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Mike Romain wrote:
You are describing the symptoms of West Nile Virus in the crows.

Your local health department likely wants those crows for testing.
Here is a Center for Disease Control (CDC) link to find out who to
call:

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/west...ity_states.htm


No CDC in Japan, but I'll find out if there is some other such agency. I
just read that some crows up north have tested positive for the bird flu
virus found in SE Asia. I'm going to mention that to them. Japanese love
panic, so they might latch on to that theory rather than the poor cats.

rona

--
***For e-mail, replace .com with .ca Sorry for the inconvenience!***

"[America] is filled with people who decided not to live in Europe. We
had people who really wanted to live in Europe, but didn't have the
energy to go back. We call them Canadians." ---Grover Norquist in
Newsweek, November 22, 2004


 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Last year's Voyage Part 1 Mischief Cat anecdotes 0 April 22nd 05 04:41 PM
Cat drinking fountains? Steve84 Cat health & behaviour 22 October 6th 04 01:24 AM
"The Russian Blue" book, anyone? Aleksey Gurtovoy Cats - misc 430 June 8th 04 02:02 AM
New Toys Tanada Cat anecdotes 5 October 5th 03 10:42 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:20 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 CatBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.